Audrey Kurth Cronin joined the faculty of American University’s School of International Service in August 2016. Her previous position was Director of the Center for Security Policy Studies, and Director of the International Security Program at George Mason University.
Before that, she was a faculty member and director of the core course on War and Statecraft at the U.S. National War College (2007-2011).
Professor Cronin’s career has combined academic positions and government service. She came to the war college from Oxford University (Nuffield College), where she was Academic Director of Studies for the Oxford/Leverhulme Programme on the Changing Character of War (2005-2007).
Before that, she was Specialist in Terrorism at the Congressional Research Service, advising Members of Congress in the aftermath of 9/11.
She has also served in the U.S. Executive branch, including in the Office of the Secretary of Defense for Policy; the Office of the Secretary of the Navy; and the American Embassy in Moscow. She often consults at senior levels of the U.S. government.
Professor Cronin is widely published on strategy and nonstate actors. Her latest book which The New Yorker called "a landmark study" is How Terrorism Ends: Understanding the Decline and Demise of Terrorist Campaigns (Princeton University Press). It was recently translated into Chinese and Arabic.
She regularly writes for academic and general interest audiences, in journals including Foreign Affairs, International Security, and Survival, as well as on-line venues and blogs. She also does media interviews for prominent national and international outlets.
In 2015 she was named Australia’s Keogh Chair and traveled throughout the country speaking about the future of conflict, innovation and technology.
Professor Cronin has repeatedly spoken at the World Economic Forum (where she was Chairman of the Global Agenda Council on Terrorism), the Council on Foreign Relations (where she is a member), the IISS (London), and many other national and international venues.
Her forthcoming book, to be published in 2018, is about emerging technologies and their use by violent nonstate actors.